"Not only is this one of the greatest live soul albums ever released, it also reveals a rougher, rawer, and more immediate side to Sam Cooke that his singles only hinted at, good as they were. Working with a merged band that included guitarist Cliff White and drummer Albert "June" Gardner (New Orleans own) from Cooke's regular touring outfit and saxophonist King Curtis and his band, Cooke brings a gospel fervor to these whirlwind versions, which are fiery, emotionally direct, and hit with uncommon power. Every track burns with an insistent, urgent feel, and although Cooke practically defines melisma on his single releases, here he reaches past that into deeper territory that finds him almost literally shoving and pushing each song forward with shouts, asides, and spoken interactions with the audience, which becomes as much a part of this set as any bandmember. "Chain Gang" is stripped down to a raw nerve, "Twistin' the Night Away" explodes out of the gate like a runaway rocket, and Curtis' sax breaks on "Somebody Have Mercy" make it sound like the saxophone was invented for this one song alone...... Although recorded January 12, 1963, at the Harlem Square Club in Miami in 1963, RCA didn't release it as an album until 1985. The set was remixed from the original first generation three-track tape for 2000's The Man Who Invented Soul box, and while the music (and Cooke's vocals in particular) sounded much cleaner, much of the crowd noise from the 1985 mixes was toned down, robbing the recording of some of its claustrophobic, frenzied power. The mix used here seems to more or less split the difference, but the crucial key is and was always Cooke's vocals, and while he was a marvelously smooth, versatile, and urbane singer on his official pop recordings, here he explodes into one of the finest sets of raw secular gospel ever captured on tape. It is essential listening in any version."

6 comments:
This is a truly tremendous and unique recording. I recalled on the last Sam Cooke thread the day when this came on the car radio unexpectedly after its discovery in 1985, and I was so blown away that I couldn't even drive - just had to sit and listen on the side of the road with my jaw down.
One small question: How does Steve Leggett figure that Rod Stewart picked up his raspy voice from this recording? So where did Stewart's pre-1985 rasp come from? :D
there it is, sam's best ever album...
good question, Preslives! :-)
I can't figure out how he could make such a reference, I first enjoyed the review for the enthusiastic first part but I'm thinking of replacing it due to the dumb Stewart reference, how can he mention them in the same breath?
Great share KC!! Cooke's RCA sides don't get the love they should.
In general, live albums tend to be amongst my favorite when it comes to many artists. Bill Withers at Carnegie, Curtis Live!, Aretha In Paris...
When Sam Cooke is concerned, nothing approaches this album for really understanding his style and vocal approach.
Nice... this was a seminal part of my soul education as a youth. I had no idea that the original lp mix was so different from what was on the box set. That "claustrophobic" feel was what originally struck me as sounding so different from any other live album I'd heard at that point (I must have been 15 or 16)... thank you for this! I'm looking forward to hearing this with fresh ears.
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